Bach Case
Check out this page if you are looking for Bach Case
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![]() BACH TROMBONE USA NO NUMBERS ON IT INSTRUMENT WITH HARD CASE US $199.00
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![]() Selmer Bach Trombone Case US $39.99
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![]() PLEASE MAKE AN OFFER NEW Bach Prelude Trombone w Backpack Case NEW MODEL US $399.00
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![]() BACH USA Brass Nickel Trombone Mouthpiece Case US $159.95
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![]() Vincent Bach Selmer Bundy Silver Plated Trombone w Case Mouthpiece US $99.99
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![]() Bach 36G Stradivarius Series Trombone w case and mouthpiece Great condition US $1,100.00
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![]() BACH STRADIVARIUS MODEL 36 BRASS professional TROMBONE 2 MOUTHPIECES CASE GREAT US $1,799.99
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![]() Selmer Bach TB300 Student Trombone with Case US $399.00
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![]() Bach Soloist Brass Beginner Slide Trombone With Hard Case US $150.00
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![]() Used late 1980s Bach Stradivarius Bass Trombone Model 50BL 50 BL with case US $2,095.00
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![]() Bach Stradivarius Trombone Model 42 with Carrying Case US $699.00
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![]() Trombone Hard Case New For Bach US $78.00
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![]() BACH TROMBONE WITH BACH HARD SHELL CASE US $475.00
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![]() Bach Brass Trombone with Hard Case US $140.00
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![]() Bach Stradivarius 50T3L Bass Trombone with Bach Case 10 1 2 bell US $4,800.00
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![]() BACH STRADIVARIUS 36G 70S NICE ORIGINAL SHAPE SUPER PLAYER NICE CASE F ATTACHMT US $1,076.56
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![]() BACH 50B SINGLE ROTOR BASS TROMBONE MINT WITH PROTEC CASE CONN 5G MOUTHPIECE US $2,395.00
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![]() NEW BLESSING C200 MARCHING TROMBONE CASE FITS BLESSING BACH AND OLDS US $95.00
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![]() BACH STRADIVARIUS MOUNT VERNON 36B TROMBONE W ORIGINAL CASE US $2,700.00
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![]() Elkhart Artist Antique Trombone w Velvet Lined Case and Vincent Bach Mouthpiece US $1,249.99
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![]() Bach 42B Trigger Closed Wrap 11508 Trombone with a Bach Gladestone Case US $745.00
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![]() Bach 42 Stradivarius Strad Trombone New Protec Case New MP US $1,050.00
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![]() Bach TB300 Bb Student Trombone w case US $99.99
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![]() BACH STRADIVARIUS TROMBONE MODEL 36B 36 Bb W F ROTOR ORIGINAL CASE OWNER US $499.99
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Free Concert in Central Park Every Weekend
New York's Central Park has become an oasis the city fathers never imagined. The music of Central Park was never part of the original design, but slowly, gently, this grand green space has become a great place to hear great music.
Thanks to Susan Keser. This violin virtuoso stepped in front of the tulips three years ago and began playing world-class versions of Vivaldi, Bach and Beethoven to the passing crowd. Now she has regulars who line the benches on warm weekends to listen to this delicate, passionate master make concert-hall music sound like it belongs among the flowers and trees.
She plays the same spot every Saturday and Sunday from nine to five. She announces each song, making sure her listeners know what they are hearing. Then she begins to play. You know immediately this is a serious effort, not some half-hearted attempt to imitate classical music for tips. Her focus is palpable. Her intensity drips like Bach's falling cascades in an impossible commentary on what it means to come to the park, to seek refuge, to search for purpose in a city that can assault your sense of well-being.
Here she is, assuring, calming, stirring hearts in Central Park.
She may nod at you as you drop fills into her violin case to purchase her CD. She bows when the bench patrons applaud. Then she resumes her graceful, serene stance, and feminine-muscled arms stretch the bowstring across the violin, and the children begin to dance.
It's the children that instruct the listeners. These tots don't know that this is supposed to be important music. They dance because that of what Vivaldi knew about the human spirit: we respond to grace, pulse, rising and falling with inevitable appreciation. If he could see the children of Central Park dancing to his music, he would never allow it to be played in a concert hall again.
Regulars line the benches at nine a.m. Tourists wonder what kind of city is this that places a maestro along the path to Bethesda Fountain for their enjoyment. Surely this city has become great because of this spirit.
At dusk, as Ms. Keser lovingly wipes down her violin and places it to sleep in its case, it as if she has played the park to life and now is putting it to rest. A city once known for its dollar-grubbing Squeegee Men and Times-Square Hookers is becoming known for this graceful, serene, passionate woman who serenades the tulips.
The city is heading into its third year of Ms. Keser's concerts. When the noise and the hustlers become too much, a moment of respite at Susan Keser's open-air impromptu Central Park concert hall will remind you that we all love New York for its potential to make us great.
About the Author
Kevin Johnston writes for TheExaminer.com at http://www.examiner.com/local-music-in-new-york/kevin-johnston.


US $199.00























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